Notes on Tragedy – Medea/Gender Unit

Mod. Humanities / Graduation Project

Two sections of DRAMA:

  • Tragedy
  • Comedy

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COMEDY TRAGEDY

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Funny Sad

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Has happy ending Has unhappy ending

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Typical ending = Marriage Typical ending = Death

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ARISTOTLE – 384 – 322 B.C.

1st great theorist of dramatic art

Defined tragedy in his work Poetics

Concepts form the basis of the archetypal notion of TRAGEDY

According to Aristotle, TRAGEDY is defined as – the imitation in dramatic form of an action that is serious and complete with incidents arousing pity and fear such as to cause a catharsis of such emotions.

TRAGEDY – CENTRAL FEATURES:

  • Language used is pleasurable and appropriate throughout to the situation in which it is used
  • Chief characters are noble persons (‘better than ourselves’)
  • Actions the characters perform are noble actions
  • Plot involves a change in the protagonist’s fortune, in which he usually but not always, falls from happiness to misery
  • Protagonist, though not perfect, is hardly a bad person; his misfortunes result not from a character deficiency but from what Aristotle called hamartia (a criminal act committed in ignorance of some material fact or even for the sake of a greater good)
  • Tragic Plot has organic unity – events follow not just after one another but because of one another
  • Best Tragic Plots – involve a reversal (change from one state of things within the play to its opposite) or a discovery (a change from ignorance to knowledge) or both

KEY Characteristics of a Tragic Hero:

Hero is a man of noble stature

-is good, though not perfect, and his fall results from committing ‘hamartia’

-Some critical tradition attributes the fall of the hero to some tragic flaw – some fault of character such as inordinate ambition, quickness to anger, tendency to jealousy, overweening pride; or to some excess of virtue – a nobility of character that makes him unfit for life among ordinary mortals

Hero is personally responsible for his fall – it’s his own fault, a result of his free choice/will; not the result of pure accident or someone else’s villainy or some malignant fate

Hero’s misfortune – not wholly deserved (KEY)

Tragic fall is NOT pure loss – tragic hero gains some self-knowledge before his downfall/death – a change from ignorance to knowledge, for which the hero can acknowledge the justness of it (‘LIGHTBULB MOMENT’)

Tragedies – arouse solemn emotions, but do not leave the audience in a state of

depression (catharsis – purging/release of these emotions through the act of

watching/reading the play – a common, shared experience) – LEARN BY

WATCHING, and APPLY AS NEEDED…

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TRAGEDY COMEDY

Emphasizes human greatnessHighlights human weakness

Celebrates human freedomEmphasizes human limitations

Challenges us w/ vision of human Exposes human folly

possibility

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